Joseph von Führich (fully Josef Ritter von Führich) (9 February 1800 – 13 March 1876) was an Austrian painter, one of the Nazarenes. He painted religious pictures almost exclusively. Führich acquired his greatest fame as a draughtsman.[1]

Joseph von Führich

Biography

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Madonna with child, Saint Adelheid and Saint Francis by Joseph von Führich

He was born at Kratzau (today Chrastava) in Bohemia. Deeply impressed as a boy by rustic pictures adorning the wayside chapels of his native country, his first attempt at composition was a sketch of the Nativity for the festival of Christmas in his father's house. He lived to see the day when, becoming celebrated as a composer of scriptural episodes, his sacred subjects were transferred in numberless repetitions to the roadside churches of the Austrian state, where peasants thus learnt to admire modern art reviving the models of earlier ages.[2] He learned the elements of art in his father's workshop where he practised drawing.[1]

In 1816, his father sent him to the Academy of Prague to study under Joseph Bergler. His first inspiration was derived from the prints of Dürer and Peter von Cornelius' illustrations to Goethe's Faust,[1] and the first fruit of this turn of study was the Genofeva series.[2] On his journeys to Dresden and Vienna he became fond of Dürer's creations.

In 1826 he went to Rome, where he added three frescoes to those executed by Cornelius and Overbeck in the Casino Massimo,[2] showing scenes from Torquato Tasso's Gerusalemme liberata.[3]

Führich was an adherent of the Nazarene movement, a romantic religious artist who sought to restore the spirit of Dürer and give new shape to biblical subjects. Without the power of Peter von Cornelius or the grace of Johann Friedrich Overbeck, he composed with great skill, especially in outline. His mastery of distribution, form, movement and expression was considerable. In its peculiar way his drapery was perfectly cast.[2]

 
Austrian 10 Gulden note (1863) designed by Führich[4]

According to an assessment in the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, "[e]ssentially creative as a landscape draughtsman, he had no feeling for colour; and when he produced monumental pictures he was not nearly so successful as when designing subjects for woodcuts. Führich's fame extended far beyond the Austrian capital, and his illustrations to Tieck's Genofeva, the Lord's Prayer, the Triumph of Christ, the Road to Bethlehem, the Succession of Christ according to Thomas a Kempis, the Prodigal Son, and the verses of the Psalter, became well known. His "Prodigal Son", especially, is remarkable for the fancy with which the spirit of evil is embodied in a figure constantly recurring, and like that of Mephistopheles exhibiting temptation in a human yet demoniacal shape."[2]

The year 1829 saw him again in Prague. In 1831 he finished the "Triumph of Christ", later in the Raczynski palace at Berlin. In 1834 he was made custos and in 1841 professor of composition in the Academy of Vienna. After this he completed the monumental pictures of the church of St Nepomuk, and in 1854–61 a vast series of wall paintings which cover the inside of the Lerchenfeld church at Vienna. In 1872 he was pensioned and made a knight of the order of Franz Joseph; 1875 is the date of his illustrations to the Psalms.[2]

Führich died in Vienna. His autobiography was published in 1875, and a memoir by his son Lucas in 1886.[2]

Works

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Notes

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Regarding personal names: Ritter is a title, translated approximately as 'Sir' (denoting a knight), not a first or middle name. There is no equivalent female form.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Gietmann, Gerhard. "Joseph Führich." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1909. 10 August 2023   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911.
  3. ^ Sutter, Christiane (2012). Die Kreuzfahrerrezeption in der deutschen Malerei des 19. Jahrhundert. Münster: LIT. p. 51. ISBN 9783643114709.
  4. ^ Hessler, Gene (2005). The International Engraver's Line. Gene Hessler. p. 106. ISBN 978-0976841104.

Sources

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